Best The Oxford Tradition Summer School for Grades 10-12 Summer Camps 2025

The best The Oxford Tradition Summer School for Grades 10-12 summer camps taking place in summer 2025

Archaeology (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Under professional guidance, students reconstitute the daily lives of ancient civilizations through a mixture of lab work, investigating artifacts in museums and visits to local digs. They learn how to read evidence and design their own research projects, and even explore how an archeologist of the future might view us.

Biomedical Engineering (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Drawing on a range of disciplines, including Medicine, Engineering, Biology, and Computing, Biodmedical Engineers develop the systems and devices that make advances in medicine possible. On this course, students will develop a firm grasp of engineering principles and techniques while using medical case studies to discover how these are applied to solving a range of problems. The class will be exposed to various aspects of the field, from new-age prosthetics to medical imaging and drug delivery via engineering for the heart. The course will conclude with students designing and presenting a model healthcare engineering project of their own.

Classics (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

This course examines the literature, philosophy, history, art, and scientific thought of Ancient Greece and Rome. From readings of classical authors to tours of the Ashmolean and local Roman sites, students receive an imaginative introduction to Greco-Roman civilization, explore why the classical world has been admired for millennia, and how it continues to influence society today.

Creative Writing (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Students compose fiction and poetry under the guidance of a published writer, with Oxford's rich literary history as their inspiration. They explore their own potential by experimenting with new forms and styles of writing. Successful authors give workshops in which students learn about the creative process and the practicalities of publication. Students develop a portfolio of their best writing and collaborate to design, edit, and publish a literary magazine.

Criminology (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Through workshops, debates, and visits to police stations and criminal courts, students explore individual and social theories of crime, philosophies of punishment, criminal profiling, incident analysis, and basic forensic science. They consider the causes of crime, the influence of the media upon crime, and issues of race, inequality, and gender within the context of the British and American criminal justice systems.

English Literature (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

This course examines some of the great works of English literature from Chaucer to Zadie Smith amidst the evocative surroundings of Oxford. Students engage with a wealth of writers in the literary pantheon to improve their skills in close reading, textual criticism, and clear, informed writing. Each student engages in a close study of a chosen text in the final week.

Entrepreneurialism (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Students discover what drives entrepreneurs - the rules they follow and the ones they defy. They learn how to identify demand, determine fixed and marginal costs, generate a business plan, canvas for support, calculate overheads, estimate break-even and future value, and manage debts and depreciation. For their final project, students launch their own mini-businesses.

Critical Thinking (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

To what extent do people subconsciously take on ideas from the society in which they were raised? Are we all unwitting products of forces we did not choose? This course combines philosophy with critical theory to examine why the world is the way it is. Students call on a range of thinkers to analyze the political and societal trends that define the 21st century. They learn to interrogate information, discuss controversial topics sensitively, and construct persuasive arguments.

Development Economics (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Students get to grips with the global economy and, within it, with its inequalities. Drawing on geography, economics, biology, demography, social and political history, they seek to determine why, in the past 150 years, certain parts of the world have thrived while others have not, and what measures – if any – communities, governments, and supranational organizations can take to make the global economy more equitable while ensuring its sustainability. Students complete the course by proposing their own measures either for individual states, regions, or supranational organizations.

Engineering (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Students learn the principles of engineering science. Both world-renowned and local examples are examined, and the findings applied to a variety of case studies to solve mechanical, structural, and architectural problems. They complete the course by designing a model engineering project of their own.

Environmental Science and Sustainability (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

As the world teeters on the brink of ecological disaster, students are introduced to the complex science behind the headlines. They learn about the different disciplines that combine to make Environmental science possible, notably Atmospheric Science, Chemistry, and Ecology. Working from a range of case studies, they discover how environmental scientists assess and respond to different challenges, and learn about the benefits and disbenefits popular proposed solutions, from carbon offset to electric cars, lab-grown meat and the prospect of radical lifestyle change.

Global Business (The Oxford Tradition)
http://Fees
$12,225
http://Ages
16 -18
http://Location
Oxford

Students are exposed to the mechanisms, institutions, and principles that underpin modern business. They address the main business principles of strategic planning, marketing, economics, finance, accounting, and management. Concepts covered include SWOT analysis, developing a marketing strategy, as well as working through how to create a product-centered company and draft a business plan. For their final project, they create a mock company that they present in a "Shark Tank", mirroring the high-pressure, quick-tempo presentations used at colleges, business schools, and startup incubators around the world.

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